Legal Research (Mostly U.S.)
The Donald E. Pray Law Library is open to main campus students, and many (but not all) of their online resources are also available with a main campus OUNetID. See their Beginner's Guide to Law Library Resources, guide to the Supreme Court of the United States, and all their guides. Contact their Reference Desk at (405) 325-5268 or email them at Law-LibraryReference@ou.edu
See also this guide from Yale University, Locating Court Records, Briefs and Oral Arguments, and this page from the Library of Congress, How To Find Free Case Law Online.
- Caselaw Access Project (Harvard)The Caselaw Access Project (“CAP”) expands public access to U.S. law. The goal is to make all published U.S. court decisions freely available to the public online, in a consistent format.
- CourtListener (Free Law Project)Seeks to provide free access to primary legal materials, develop legal research tools, and support academic research on legal corpora.
- FastcaseProvides access to federal and state case law, statutes, regulation, constitutions, and court rules.
- Google ScholarSearch the full-text of court opinions and legal journals available on the Internet. Choose to search case law rather than articles.
- HeinOnlineLegal periodicals, code of federal regulations, legal classics, treaties and agreements, U.S. Attorney General opinions, U.S. Federal Legislative History, U.S. Presidential Library, U.S. statutes at large, the U.S. Supreme Court Library, and more.
- Indian Claims Insight (Proquest)Allows researchers to understand and analyze Native American migration and forced resettlement throughout U.S. history, U.S. Government Indian removal policies, and subsequent actions to address Native American claims against the U.S. Government. Includes congressional publications, treaties, maps, and docket materials for all Indian Claims Commission cases, as well as cases that preceded and followed the existence of the commission.
- Legal Collection (Ebsco)Offers information centered on the discipline of law and legal topics including criminal justice, ethics, federal law, international law, labor and human resource law, medical law, organized crime and the environment; some full text is available.
- Legal Information Source (Ebsco)Offers tools and how-to instructions covering a wide-range of legal issues. A majority of the full-text legal reference books available are provided through Nolo, a provider of legal information for consumers and small businesses. With the Legal Forms by U.S. State feature, users can search state-specific legal forms by top subject areas, including adoption, bankruptcy, name changes and more. Some full text is available.
- LLMC DigitalDocuments related to the U.S. Federal Executive, Judicial, and Legislative branches.
- Making of Modern Law: Legal Treatises (1800-1926; Gale)More than 21,000 Anglo-American works from casebooks, local practice manuals, form books, works for lay readers, pamphlets, letters, etc.
- Making Of Modern Law: Trials (1600-1926; Gale)Documents on Anglo-American trials including published trial transcripts; popular printed accounts of sensational trials for murder; unofficially published accounts of trials, briefs, arguments, and other trial documents; official records of legislative proceedings, administrative proceedings, and arbitration sessions; and books and pamphlets about specific trials.
- PACER (U.S. Government)The official case location system for the federal government. NOTES: PACER requires an individual registration, and once you register you must search quarterly to keep your account active. PACER charges you for each search run and each document retrieved, but no fee is owed for electronic access to court data or audio files until an account holder accrues charges of more than $30.00 in a quarterly billing cycle.
- Session Laws Library (HeinOnline)Contains the session laws of all 50 U.S. states, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, as well as governmental session laws from the United States, Australia, Canada, and the Bahamas. Full text available.
- Slavery in America and the World: History, Culture & Law (HeinOnline)Brings together, for the first time, all known legal materials on slavery in the United States and the English-speaking world, including more than 1,000 books and pamphlets.
- Treaties and Agreements Library (HeinOnline)Provides access to all U.S. treaties, whether currently in force, expired, or not yet officially published.
- United States Code (current; U.S. House of Representatives)Office of the Law Revision Counsel of the United States House of Representatives.
- United States Code (to 2018; HeinOnline)Full-text of the United States Code (official version) and the Statutes at Large in PDF page image format going back to the start of these publications. This database should be your source for locating official Acts of Congress or references to the official code.